THE BOTTOM RUNG
An early start was delayed. Joel
had figured without his guest, as the Texan stands
in a class by himself. The peace and serenity
of pastoral life affects its people, influencing their
normal natures into calm and tranquil ways. Hence,
instead of the expected start at sunrise, after breakfast
the trail foreman languidly sauntered out to the corral,
followed by the boys.
The old physician, even, grew impatient.
“What on earth do you think is detaining that
man?” he inquired of Forrest. “Here
the sun is nearly an hour high, and not a wheel turning.
And I can see him from the tent opening, sitting on
a log, flicking the ground with his quirt and chatting
with those boys. What do you suppose they are
talking about?”
“Well, now, that’s a hard
question,” answered Forrest. “I’ll
chance the subject is of no importance. Just
a little social powwow with the boys, most likely.
Sit down, Doctor, and take life easy—the
cows will calve in the spring.”
Patience had almost ceased to be a
virtue when the trail boss put in an appearance at
the tent. “You are in no particular hurry,
are you, Doctor?” he inquired, with a friendly
smile.
“Oh, no,” said the physician,
with delightful irony; “I was just thinking
of having the team unhooked, and lay over another day.
Still, I am some little distance from home, and have
a family that likes to see me occasionally.”
The buckboard rattled away. “Come
in the tent,” called Forrest to the boys.
“If old Paul sees you standing out there, he’s
liable to think of something and come back. Honestly,
when it comes to killing time, that old boy is the
bell steer.”
Only three were now left at the homestead.
The first concern was to intercept the next passing
herd. Forrest had a wide acquaintance among trail
foremen, had met many of them at Dodge only ten days
before, while passing that supply point, and it was
a matter of waiting until a herd should appear.
There was little delay. Joel
was sent at ten o’clock to the nearest swell,
and Dell an hour later. The magic was working
overtime; the dust cloud was there! In his haste
to deliver the message, the sentinel’s horse
tore past the tent and was only halted at the corral.
“It’s there!” he shouted, returning,
peering through the tent-flaps. “They’re
coming; another herd’s coming. It’s
in the dip behind the first divide. Shall I go?
I saw it first.”
“Dismount and rest your saddle,”
said Forrest. “Come in and let’s make
a little medicine. If this herd has one, here’s
where we get a cow. Come in and we’ll plot
against the Texans.”
With great misgiving, Dell dismounted.
As he entered the tent, Forrest continued: “Sit
on the corner of my bunk, and we’ll talk the
situation over. Oh, I’m going to send you,
never fear. Now, the trouble is, we don’t
know whose herd this may be, and you must play innocent
and foxy. If the herd is behind the first divide,
it’ll water in the Beaver about four o’clock.
Now, ride down the creek and keep your eagle eye open
for a lone horseman, either at the crossing or on
the trail. That’s the foreman, and that’s
the man we want to see. He may be ten miles in
the lead of his herd, and you want to ride straight
to him. Give him all the information you can
regarding the water, and inquire if this is one of
Lovell’s herds. That will put you on a chatting
basis, and then lead up to your errand. Tell
him that you are running a trail hospital, and that
you have a wounded man named Quince Forrest at your
camp, and ask the foreman to come up and see him.
Once you get him here, your work is over, except going
back after the cow.”
Dell was impatient to be off, and
started for the opening. “Hold on,”
commanded Forrest, “or I’ll put a rope
on you. Now, ride slowly, let your horse set
his own pace, and don’t come back without your
man. Make out that I’m badly wounded, and
that you feel uneasy that blood poisoning may set
in.”
The messenger lost no time in getting
away. Once out of sight of the tent, Dell could
not resist the temptation to gallop his mount over
level places. Carrying the weight of a boy was
nothing to the horse, and before half an hour had
passed, the ford and trail came in view of the anxious
courier. Halting in order to survey the horizon,
the haze and heat-waves of summer so obstructed his
view that every object looked blurred and indistinct.
Even the dust cloud was missing; and pushing on a
mile farther, he reined in again. Now and then
in the upper sky, an intervening cloud threw a shadow
over the plain, revealing objects more distinctly.
For a moment one rested over the trail crossing, and
like prophecy fulfilled, there was the lone horseman
at the ford!
In the waste places it is a pleasure
to unexpectedly meet a fellow being. Before being
observed, Dell rode within hailing distance, greeting,
and man and boy were soon in friendly converse.
There was water sufficient for all needs, the herd
required no pilot, the summons found a ready response,
and the two were soon riding up the Beaver in a jog
trot.
The gait admitted of free conversation,
and the new foreman soon had Dell on the defensive.
“I always hate to follow a Lovell outfit,”
said the stranger regretfully; “they’re
always in trouble. Old man Don’s a nice
enough man, but he sure works sorry outfits on the
trail. I’ve been expecting to hear something
like this. If it isn’t rebranding their
saddle stock with nigger brands, it’s sure to
be something worse. And now that flat-headed
Quince Forrest plows a fire-guard down his own leg
with a six-shooter! Well, wouldn’t that
sour sweet milk!”
“Oh, it wasn’t his fault,”
protested Dell; “he only loaned his pistol,
and it was returned with the hammer on a cartridge.”
“Of course,” disgustedly
assented the trail boss; “with me it’s
an old story. Hadn’t no more sabe than
to lend his gun to some prowling tenderfoot.
More than likely he urged its loan on this short-horn.
Yes, I know Colonel Forrest; I’ve known him
to bet his saddle and ride bareback as the result.
It shows his cow-sense. Rather shallow-brained
to be allowed so far from home.”
“Well,” contended poor
Dell, “they surely were no friends. At least
Mr. Quince don’t speak very highly of that man.”
“That’s his hindsight,”
said the trail foreman. “If the truth ever
comes out, you’ll notice his foresight was different.
Colonel Quince is famous, after the horse is stolen,
for locking the stable door. That other time
he offered to take an oath, on a stack of Bibles, never
to bet his saddle again. The trouble is the game
never repeats; the play never comes up twice alike.
If that old boy’s gray matter ever comes to
full bloom, long before his allotted time, he’ll
wither away.”
Dell was discouraged. He realized
that his defense of his friend was weak. This
second foreman seemed so different from either Priest
or Forrest. He spoke with such deep regret of
the seeming faults of others that the boy never doubted
his sincerity. He even questioned Dell with such
an innocent countenance that the lad withered before
his glance, and became disheartened at the success
of the errand. Forced to the defense continually,
on several occasions Dell nearly betrayed the object
of bringing the new man to the homestead, but in each
instance was saved by some fortunate turn in the conversation.
Never was sight more welcome than the tent, glistening
in the sun, and never was relief from duty more welcome
to a courier. The only crumb of comfort left to
the boy who had ridden forth so boldly was that he
had not betrayed the object of his mission and had
brought the range men together. Otherwise his
banner was trailing in the dust.
The two rode direct to the tent.
During the middle of the day, in order to provide
free ventilation, the walls were tucked up, and the
flaps, rear and front, thrown wide open. Stretched
on his bunk, Forrest watched the opening, and when
darkened by the new arrival, the wounded man’s
greeting was most cordial. “Well, if it
isn’t old Nat Straw,” said he, extending
his hand. “Here, I’ve been running
over in my mind the different trail bosses who generally
go north of the Platte River, but you escaped my memory.
It must have gotten into my mind, somehow, that you
had married and gone back to chopping cotton.
Still driving for Uncle Jess Ellison, I reckon?”
“Yes, still clerking for the
same drover,” admitted Straw, glancing at the
wounded limb. “What’s this I hear
about you laying off, and trying to eat some poor
nester out of house and home? You must be getting
doty.”
“Enjoy yourself, Nat. The
laugh’s on me. I’m getting discouraged
that I’ll ever have common horse sense.
Isn’t it a shame to be a fool all your life!”
Straw glanced from the bunk to Dell.
“I was just telling the boy, as we rode up the
creek, that you needed a whole heap of fixing in your
upper loft. The poor boy tried his best to defend
you, but it was easy to see that he hadn’t known
you long.”
“And of course you strung him
for all he could carry,” said Forrest.
“Here, Dell. You were in such a hurry to
get away that I overlooked warning you against these
trail varmints. Right now, I can see old Nat
leading you in under a wet blanket, and your colors
dragging. Don’t believe a word he told
you, and don’t even give him a pleasant look
while he stays here.”
The discouraged boy brightened, and
Joel and Dell were excused, to water and picket the
horses. “You ought to be ashamed of yourself,”
resumed Forrest, “brow-beating that boy.
Considering my hard luck, I’ve fallen into angels’
hands. These boys are darling fellows. Now
before you leave, square yourself with that youngest
one.”
“A little jollying while he’s
young won’t hurt him,” replied Straw.
“It’s not a bad idea to learn early to
believe nothing that you hear and only half of what
you see. If you had been taken snipe hunting oftener
when you were young, it wouldn’t hurt you any
now. There are just about so many knocks coming
to each of us, and we’ve got to take them along
with the croup, chicken-pox, measles, and mumps.”
During the absence of the boys, Forrest
informed Straw of the sad condition which confronted
the lads, when accident and necessity threw him into
their hands. He also repeated Priest’s opinion
of the valuable range, unoccupied above on the Beaver,
and urged his assistance in securing some cattle with
which to stock and claim it for the boys.
“There’s plenty of flotsam
on the trail,” said he, “strays and sore-footed
cattle, to occupy this valley and give these boys a
start in life. I never even got thanked for a
stray, and I’ve turned hundreds of them loose
on these upper ranges, refused on the delivery of a
herd. Somebody gets them, and I want these boys
of mine to get a few hundred head during this summer.
Here’s the place to drop your cripples and stray
cows. From what Paul says, there’s range
above here for thousands of cattle, and that’s
the foundation of a ranch. Without a hoof on it,
it has a value in proportion to its carrying capacity,
and Priest and I want these boys to secure it.
They’ve treated me white, and I’m going
to make a fight for them.”
The appeal was not in vain. “Why
not,” commented Straw. “Let me in
and we’ll make it three-handed. My herd
is contracted again this year to the same cattle company
on the Crazy Woman, in Wyoming, as last season, and
I want to fool them this trip. They got gay on
my hands last summer, held me down to the straight
road brand at delivery, and I’ll see to it that
there are no strays in my herd this year. I went
hungry for fresh beef, and gave those sharks over
forty good strays. They knew I’d have to
leave them behind me. Watch me do it again.”
“About how many have you now, and how do they
run?”
“They’re a hit-and-miss
lot, like strays always are. Run from a good cow
down to yearlings. There ought to be about twenty-five
head, and I’ll cut you out five or six cripples.
They could never make it through, nohow.”
“Any calves among the strays?”
“Two or three.”
“Good enough. Give each
of the boys a cow and calf, and the others to me.
We’ll let on that I’ve bought them.”
That no time might be lost in friendly
chat, a late dinner was eaten in the tent. Straw
would have to meet his herd at the trail crossing that
afternoon, which would afford an opportunity to cut
out all strays and cripples. One of the boys
would return with him, for the expected cow, and when
volunteers were called for, Dell hesitated in offering
his services. “I’ll excuse you,”
said Straw to Joel, who had jumped at the chance.
“I’m a little weak on this red-headed boy,
and when a cow hand picks on me for his side partner,
the choice holds until further orders. Bring
in the horses off picket, son, and we’ll be riding.”
The latter order was addressed to
Dell. No sooner had the boy departed than Straw
turned to Joel. “I’ve fallen head
over ears in love with the idea of this trail hospital.
Just where it ought to be; just about midway between
Dodge and Ogalalla. Of course I’m hog wild
to get in on it. I might get a man hurt any day,
might get sick myself, and I want to be a stockholder
in this hospital of yours. What’s your favorite
color in cows?”
Joel’s caution caused him to
hesitate. “If you have one, send me a milk-white
cow with a black face” instantly said
Forrest. “White cows are rich in cream,
and I’m getting peevish, having to drink black
coffee.”
“A white cow for you,”
said Straw, nodding to Forrest, “and what color
for you?” But Joel, although half convinced,
made no answer.
“Send him a red one,”
authorized Forrest; “red steers bring a dollar
a head more than mongrel colors.”
“A red cow and calf for Joel,
a white one for milk, and Dell can pick his own,”
said Straw, murmuring a memorandum. “Now,
that little passel of cripples, and odds and ends,”
again nodding to Forrest, “that I’m sawing
off on you, I’ll bring them up with the cows.
Yes, I’m coming back and stay all night.”
Joel lost all doubts on the moment.
The trail boss was coming back, was going to bring
each one a cow. There was no question but that
this stranger had the cattle in his possession; surely
he would not trifle with his own people, with an unfortunate,
wounded man. All this seemed so in keeping with
the partial outline of Priest, the old gray-haired
foreman, that the boy’s caution gave place to
firm belief. If generous princes ever walked
the earth, it was just possible that liberal ones in
the rough were still riding it in disguise.
Joel hastened to his brother with
the news. “It’s all right,”
said he, throwing the saddle on Straw’s horse.
“You go right along with this strange foreman.
He gave Mr. Quince a milk cow, a white one, and you’re
to pick one for yourself. If I were going in your
place, I’d pick a red one; red cattle are worth
a dollar a head more than any other color.”
There was something in Joel’s
voice that told Dell that his brother had not been
forgotten. “And you?—don’t
you?” stammered the younger boy.
“Mr. Quince picked out a cow
and calf for me,” replied Joel, with a loftiness
that two years’ seniority confers on healthy
boys. “I left it to him to choose mine.
You’d better pick out a red one. And say,
this hospital of ours is the real thing. It’s
the only one between Dodge and Ogalalla. This
strange foreman wants to take stock in it. I wonder
if that was what he meant by sawing off a little passel
of cattle on Mr. Quince. Now, don’t argue
or ask foolish questions, but keep your eyes and ears
open.”
Fortified anew in courage, Dell accompanied
the trail boss to meet his herd. It was a short
hour’s ride, and on sighting the cattle, then
nearing the crossing, they gave rein to their horses
and rode for the rear of the long column, where, in
the rear-guard of the trailing cattle, naturally the
sore and tender-footed animals were to be found.
The drag men knew them to a hoof, were delighted to
hear that all cripples were to be dropped, and half
a dozen were cut off and started up the Beaver.
“Nurse them to the nearest water,” said
Straw to the drag men, “and then push them up
the creek until I overtake you. Here’s where
we drop our strays and cripples. What? No,
I’m only endowing a trail hospital.”
The herd numbered thirty-one hundred
two-year-old steers. They filled the channel
of the Beaver for a mile around the crossing, crowding
into the deeper pools, and thrashing up and down the
creek in slaking their thirst. Dell had never
seen so many cattle, almost as uniform in size as
that many marbles, and the ease with which a few men
handled the herd became a nine-day wonder to the astonished
boy. And when the word passed around to cut all
strays up the creek, the facility with which the men
culled out the alien down to one class and road brand,
proved them masters in the craft. It seemed as
easily done as selecting a knife from among the other
trinkets in a boy’s pocket.
After a change of mounts for the foreman,
Dell and the trail boss drifted the strays up the
creek. The latter had counted and classed them
as cut out of the herd, and when thrown together with
the cripples, the promised little passel numbered
thirty-five cattle, not counting three calves.
Straw excused his men, promising to overtake them the
next morning, and man and boy drifted the nucleus
of a future ranch toward the homestead.
“Barring that white cow and
the red one with the speckled calf,” said Straw
to Dell, pointing out each, “you’re entitled
to pick one for yourself. Now, I’m not
going to hurry you in making your choice. Any
time before we sight the tent and shack, you are to
pick one for your own dear cow, and stand by your
choice, good or bad. Remember, it carries my
compliments to you, as one of the founders of the first
hospital on the Texas and Montana cattle trail.”
Two miles below the homestead, the
half-dozen cripples were dropped to the rear.
“You can come back to-morrow morning and get
these tender steers,” said the foreman, “and
drift them up above the improvements. You’ll
find them near here on the water. Now, we’ll
sight the tent around the next bend, and you may point
out your choice.”
“I’ll take that red steer,”
said Dell with marked decision, pointing out a yearling.
A peal of laughter greeted his choice.
“That’s a boy,” shouted Straw; “shoot
at a buck and kill a fawn! Why didn’t you
take that black cow and calf?”
“I like red cattle the best,”
replied Dell, undaunted. “I’ve heard
they bring a better price. I’ll own the
only red steer in the bunch.”
“Yes, but when your choice is
a beef, that black cow and her increase would buy
two beeves. Dell, if you ever get to be a cowman,
you’ll have to do some of your own thinking.”
Dell’s mistake was in listening
to others. Joel was equally guilty, as his lofty
comments regarding red cattle were derived from the
random remarks of Forrest. The brothers were
novices in range cattle, and Dell’s error was
based in not relying on his own judgment.
On sighting the approaching cattle,
Forrest’s bunk was eased around to the tent
opening, Joel holding the flaps apart, and the little
herd was grazed past at a snail’s pace in review.
Leaving Dell to nurse the nucleus past the improvements,
Straw dismounted at the tent. “Well,”
said he, handing the bridle reins to Joel, “that
red-headed Dell is surely the making of a great cowman.
All successful men begin at the bottom of the ladder,
and he surely put his foot on the lowest rung.
What do you suppose his choice was?”
“The bottom rung suggests a yearling,”
said Forrest.
“Stand up. You spelled
the word correct. I’m a sheep herder, if
he didn’t pick out the only, little, old, red,
dobe steer in the entire bunch!”
Forrest eased himself down on the
bunk, unable to restrain his laughter. “Well,”
said he, “we all have to learn, and no one can
say Dell wasn’t true to his colors.”